Cooling next-generation computer chips for AI requires either millions of gallons of water or huge amounts of electricity.
Columbus wants data centers to use recycled water instead of drinking water, but tech firms must foot the bill.
Water’s odd behavior becomes even more dramatic when it is supercooled, but scientists have struggled to compare the many ...
If you're shopping for desktop PCs, you might come across the acronym "AIO," possibly in more than one context. What do the ...
AI is driving a wave of data center projects across Tennessee. Here's how they could affect your community, from electricity ...
The Wyoming city has stopped taking some data-center wastewater after tracing a rare bacterium to a Meta-linked project.
Cooling the massive facilities takes enormous amounts of water, which has proven, well, not cool with many communities. But ...
In addition to numerous public beaches and pools, central Massachusetts has multiple splash pads open this time of year. Here ...
Data center development has become a hot topic this summer. According to Hannah Wiseman, professor of law at Penn State ...
When the Roanoke Valley eventually needs more drinking water, the solution may not look like a new lake carved into the ...
Georgia’s largest data center − in Fayette County − is owned by the same company that’s building one in Augusta.
Nuclear reactors are traditionally powered with dense fuel rods that can produce about 1 gigawatt of carbon-free electricity, ...